Scotiabank bursaries facilitate international study
Five Faculty of Arts graduate students have been awarded Scotiabank bursaries to fund their educational experience by travelling abroad to complete their research.
鈥淭his year, the arts grad studies committee reviewed 11 proposals for the graduate Scotiabank bursaries for international study. We had previously determined, in consultation with SGS, that there were enough funds in the endowment to support two awards for 2015. However, the overall quality of the application pool was so high that we felt strongly that more than two proposals should be funded. The Dean of Arts agreed to top up the available funds so that it was possible to make five awards for this exceptional pool of applicants,鈥 said Dr. Carrie Dyck. 鈥淭he awards come at a critical time in the graduate students' programs, enabling them to collect or complete the data needed to complete their thesis work.鈥
One of those deserving students is PhD candidate Emma Lang. The bursary will allow Ms. Lang to travel to the community of Lerwick in Shetland to conduct research for her thesis.
鈥淢y thesis looks at worker organizations that existed in rural maritime communities around the North Atlantic in the period prior to World War II. I鈥檓 looking at a few different organizations -- the Fishermen鈥檚 Protective Union in Newfoundland, a lobstermen鈥檚 union in Maine and the Socialist organization that existed in Shetland during this period,鈥 said Ms. Lang. 鈥淭he Shetland Museum and Archives in Lerwick has both paper materials and a collection of oral histories about the organization so I鈥檒l be looking at and listening to those. I鈥檓 also planning on conducting interviews with the children and grand children of those involved in that movement while I鈥檓 there. My interest in the socialist organization in Shetland, which I learned about in 2007 when I worked as an intern at the Shetland Museum and Archives, is what sparked my interest in seeing if there were other similar organizations and finding the FPU. That curiosity in turn led to my deciding to pursue a PhD and coming to the history department at 糖心视频!鈥
The other 2015 Scotiabank bursary winners are:
Anthropology student Angeline Jones will also be travelling to Scotland next year thanks to her Scotiabank bursary. Ms. Jones is looking at the politics of alcohol in Glasgow where minimum pricing has been put forward as a possible solution to curb excessive alcohol consumption.
Amy Chase is an archaeology student studying the transition from Neanderthals to homo sapiens in southern Europe and is currently in Catalonia, Spain as a result of her bursary.
Emmanuel Banchani is a graduate student in the sociology department. He is researching the role of social support in improving health outcomes in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) and the effects of non-communicable disease (NCD) among youth. He is planning to spend his award money on a research trip to Ghana where he will study in-patients at three teaching hospitals.
Finally folklorist Saeedeh Sadighjamali is currently making a second trip to Iran where she is examining how carpet weavers experience gendered power dynamics and the stories of brutal labour, exploration and abuse behind the production of the country鈥檚 famous carpets. Dr. Diane Tye believes Ms. Sadighhjamli鈥檚 work will make a significant contribution to the field of international folklorists.